View allAll Photos Tagged sensitive
just thinking about sensitvity and how words and actions affect others. sometimes i just wonder if it is me, and i am too sensitive, or if others are insensitive.
this was taken late last night after work when the rain had just started.
this is my picture for february 25, 2011
www.facebook.com/10secondsphoto
Nikon D700, Tamron SP AF 28-75mm F/2,8 XR Di LD Aspherical [IF] MACRO
Lighting / strobist info:
Jinbei DC-600 + 100cm Softbox
I don't think greebles make sense on a military ship: why not hide all of that sensitive equipment behind some armored hull plating? This is an experimental scientific vessel though, and some of the equipment was so sensitive, it had to be made from gold, and it was retrofitted by a mad-ish scientist, so outside the hull it goes. Please don't shoot or loot!
Here is my second shot of a flower in about 7 years, just to prove I think about these things and have a sensitive side. So I have written a poem to go with this image.....ahem:
Oh flower reaching for the skies,
Each day you attract the bees and flies,
You open close open close open close,
Like shops or blinking eyes,
Yet knowing that all that lives also dies.
Let me pluck you from your mud,
Drench you with a flood,
Of water from the tap,
With my camera SNAP SNAP SNAP.
Now you have immortality,
Amidst the web's virtual reality,
No cause to moan or to bicker,
Rest in peace forever....on Flickr.
-krap
How LOW can you go!?! Sample the sweet, sweet blue sensitive LOW iso films available from the Film Photography Project!
Blue-sensitive black-and-white film needs to be shot in daylight or using a flash/strobe. Avoid using a yellow filter or shooting in tungsten (indoor) light.
You get 9-Rolls in a box. All hand-rolled at the FPP Studio and packaged in a FPP box.
Box contains (9-Rolls Total):
One Roll - Super Positive BW (iso 0.8)
Two Rolls - Blue Sensitive BW (iso 6)
Two Rolls - MZ3 BW (iso 3)
Two Rolls - Kodak Fine Grain 2366 (iso 6)
Two Rolls - Kodak Hi-Contrast 5363 (iso 25)
filmphotographystore.com/products/bw-film-svema-low-iso-s...
In chaos theory, the butterfly effect is the sensitive dependence on initial conditions; where a small change at one place in a nonlinear system can result in large differences to a later state. For example, the presence or absence of a butterfly flapping its wings could lead to creation or absence of a hurricane.
Although the butterfly effect may appear to be an esoteric and unusual behavior, it is exhibited by very simple systems: for example, a ball placed at the crest of a hill might roll into any of several valleys depending on slight differences in initial position.
The term "butterfly effect" itself is related to the meteorological work of Edward Lorenz, who popularized the term.
The butterfly effect is a common trope in fiction when presenting scenarios involving time travel and with "what if" cases where one storyline diverges at the moment of a seemingly minor event resulting in two significantly different outcomes.
A butterfly is a mainly day-flying insect of the order Lepidoptera, the butterflies and moths. Like other holometabolous insects, the butterfly's life cycle consists of four parts, egg, larva, pupa and adult. Most species are diurnal. Butterflies have large, often brightly coloured wings, and conspicuous, fluttering flight. Butterflies comprise the true butterflies (superfamily Papilionoidea), the skippers (superfamily Hesperioidea) and the moth-butterflies (superfamily Hedyloidea). All the many other families within the Lepidoptera are referred to as moths.
Butterflies exhibit polymorphism, mimicry and aposematism. Some, like the Monarch, will migrate over long distances. Some butterflies have evolved symbiotic and parasitic relationships with social insects such as ants. Some species are pests because in their larval stages they can damage domestic crops or trees; however, some species are agents of pollination of some plants, and caterpillars of a few butterflies (e.g., Harvesters) eat harmful insects. Culturally, butterflies are a popular motif in the visual and literary arts.
A sensitive plant in a garden grew,
And the young winds fed it with silver dew,
And it opened its fan-like leaves to the light,
and closed them beneath the kisses of night.
~Percy Bysshe Shelley, "The Sensitive Plant," 1820
www.facebook.com/10secondsphoto
Nikon D700, Tamron SP AF 28-75mm F/2,8 XR Di LD Aspherical [IF] MACRO
Lighting / strobist info:
Jinbei DC-600 + 100cm Softbox
www.facebook.com/10secondsphoto
Nikon D700, Tamron SP AF 28-75mm F/2,8 XR Di LD Aspherical [IF] MACRO
Lighting / strobist info:
Jinbei DC-600 + 100cm Softbox
Pooh Corner Bushland Reserve, Wacol, QLD. This is probably my fav shot for the day. These birds really shine in the sunlight and what colours they reflect seems to depend on the light they are in. This was follower number one for the day and still with me when I met two really nice gals from Brisbane City Council further along my walk. Its really great to meet people who are so enthusiastic about preserving the great places we have left. The council appears to be doing a great job in maintaining the park as the species list is very good. BCC is also planning an environment education centre. Hopefully they will keep horses and dogs out of this sensitive area.
Foto : Traudel
heute gab es u.a. Treppensteigen üben ≈≈≈
und Sprachübung u.a. Zungenbrecher--z.B.:
"Sensitive Selektionssimulatoren sondieren
sogar sekundär-strukturierte Sonarselektoren -
sogar sekundär-strukturierte Sonarselektoren
sondieren sensitive Selektionssimulatoren."
I've been waiting for one of the giraffes to come close to this sign. Josh finally gave me my wish today!
I took the opportunity to walk the zoo this morning. It's good self-care!
Shooting low ISO Svema Blue Sensitive under high contrast situations to see how well the FPP D96 handles the film Maintaining detail in the highlights and shadows is the best test for this situation. First snow of the Fall Winter 2019-2020 season with some snow on the Halloween pumpkins. Love this film and developer combo.
Camera: Olympus Om2n, Zuiko 35-70mm lens.
Film: Svema Blue Sensitive, ISO 6, Processed in FPP D96, stock, 7 min. 30 seconds minutes @68 degrees.
www.filmphotographyproject/store
LabBox with gentle consistent agitation, no time compensation required.
Image by: Leslie Lazenby, 12 Nov 2019, Findlay, OH
My beautiful old lady. I met her at a busy day on the old market. She wore a tie, a grey raincoat, big round glasses and a round hat. And she was sensitive and shy like a little girl.
She moved with small steps from the one bench to the other and her look was full of curiosity. A feminist she was and an intellectual. Now, she keeps on moving on the streets, admiring small moments and discussing with small traders about the weather and the fruits and the vegetables she wishes to taste. All is interesting. All is new to her. All her life everything was new to her.
Did I scare her? I wouldn’t know. But then she didn’t say anything to me. She just saw me and froze. Was it because of fear? I believe it was because of shyness. Her hands reached one another, her eyes questioned me. She felt insecure. This kind lady just seemed new in this old world. For her qualities do not fit those of many.
My beautiful old lady with her round glasses and the round hat.
I can see her now young and beautiful, different from all the rest of the girls. Dressed like a boy. True to her emotions and thoughts. True to her first love. Didn’t compromise, she stayed strong and faithful to herself. Because, after all, she was a shy and sensitive girl.
And that is what kept her young in all these long years. Her young soul is evident to all. In her old face, there is something young and new. All is visible now for everyone to see. A strong soul, no evil left its scars in there.
Sensitive Briar (Mimosa microphylla). The leaves fold up when touched, which is a great way to keep kids entertained. Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, Cobb County, Georgia.
Signs marked the land on the other side of the river as sensitive habitat closed to human entry. I hope this was a scientist's canoe.
The Harnham Water Meadows, within the city of Salisbury, are part of a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and are an Environmentally Sensitive Area (ESA).
They incorporate a surviving part of the irrigation system once widespread across the Wessex chalkland.
The meadows are owned jointly by the Dean and Chapter of Salisbury Cathedral and the Harnham Water Meadows Trust.
The tasks of the Trust are to manage the meadows as a single entity and to restore and operate the historic irrigation structures, all consistent with the modern requirements of an SSSI.
Harnham Water Meadows are on an island between two arms of the River Nadder and a stretch on the River Avon. The Town Path bisects the meadows from Elizabeth Gardens to Harnham Mill.
Photo: Wooden bridge over the River Avon looking down the path at Elizabeth Gardens, Salisbury which leads to Harnham Mill, Harnham.